Paper Clip - randomhouse.de · Paper Clip, 1973 Oil and acrylic on ... In 2003 curator Walter Hopps...
Transcript of Paper Clip - randomhouse.de · Paper Clip, 1973 Oil and acrylic on ... In 2003 curator Walter Hopps...
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Paper Clip, 1973Oil and acrylic on canvas8 ft. 6 ¼ in. × 18 ft. 8 in. (259.7 × 569 cm)Dallas Museum of Art,Gift of The 500, Inc., Elizabeth B. Blake,Mr. and Mrs. James H. W. Jacks, Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Meltzer,Mr. Joshua Muss, Mrs. John W. O’Boyle, Dr. Joanne Stroud, and two anonymous donors in honor of Robert M. Murdock
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, 2000Oil on canvas17 ft. 1 in. × 46 ft. (520.7 × 1402.1 cm)Estate of James Rosenquist
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He often transferred these notes on color to the canvas). For the largestworks—those that would not fit in his drawing room—he gridded both collage and canvas to scale up the collage imagery and executed the underdrawings by eye, without the aid of projection. (If a source collageis gridded, it is a good bet that the canvas was likewise gridded and the charcoal underdrawing was scaled up by hand.)14
In 2003 curator Walter Hopps and I installed a long swathe of Rosenquist’s collages in a corridor of the Mies van der Rohe pavilion at the Museumof Fine Arts in Houston on the occasion of the artist’s 2003 retrospective.The works were revelatory. The overall display made clear, at a glance, a few technological developments that Rosenquist had incorporated into his collage process over the years. By the late 1980s a color photo-copy machine became a vital tool in his collage process. Mechanicalenlargement and reduction features gave the artist added flexibility toscale the individual images and components directly, before finalizingthe source collage. The machine saved a step because, by enlarging and reducing images, he could quickly scale each photocopied element to fit as desired in the source collage before transposing the collage’scomposition to canvas. This was similar to Rosenquist’s use of an opaque projector to quickly dispatch the underdrawing that enabled him tofocus on the business of painting. Rosenquist used efficient technologyto improve his workflow but he never varied in his hand-painted approach to the composition on canvas.
In the 1980s Rosenquist began using what he called a “crosshatched”technique, showing foreground and background through slivered images that overlapped. He used it first in the painting titled Star Thief (1980; fig. 24). Rosenquist mentioned the shard-like fronds of the saw palmetto trees growing around his Florida studio had inspired the technique. In collages, he was cutting out wisps of overlay material toreveal fleeting visions of women’s faces beneath (see figs. 228, 243,245, 246, 250, 262). Splicing allowed him to compress distinct inter-secting imagery with great efficiency; it allowed him to exploit multiplefields and subjects; and allowed him to combine these effects within the limits of one pictorial space as further exemplified by Welcome tothe Water Planet (1987; fig. 28),t Time Door Time D’Or (1989; fig. 30 for rthe related print), and Untitled (1995; fig. 36).d
In 1981 photographer Bob Adelman spent more than a month docu-menting the process of Rosenquist painting Star Thief in his New YorkCity studio. Measuring seventeen by forty-eight feet, Star Thief becamethe first of a handful of billboard-sized paintings Rosenquist produced inNew York and Florida in the decades that followed. Star Thief was alsofthe first to incorporate the slicing and splicing of imagery so evident inhis work in the 1980s.
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Industrial Cottage, 1977Oil on canvas6 ft. 8 in. × 15 ft. 2 in. (203.2 × 462.3 cm)Smithsonian American Art Museum, Museum purchase through the Luisita L. and Franz H. Denghausen Endowment
Pablo Picasso’s Guernica (1937), exhibited at Haus der Kunst, Munich, 1955
View of the exhibition James Rosenquist: The Swimmer in the Econo-mistat Deutsche Guggenheim, Berlin, 1998
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Hey! Let’s Go for a Ride, 1961
Advertisement for Dr. West’s Miracle Tuft in Life magazine, June 6, 1949, p. 30
Advertisement for Carling’s Alein Life magazine, June 6, 1949, p. 134
Opposite page: Detail
Rainbow, 1961
Advertisement for Alcoa Aluminumin Life magazine, April 19, 1954, p. 135
Source and Preparatory Sketch for Rainbow, 1961Magazine clipping and mixed media on paper11 ¾ × 13 15⁄16 in. (29.9 × 35.4 cm)Private collection
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the F-111 spaghetti section,photograph by Hans Namuth, 1965
Source for F-111, 1964Magazine clipping and mixed media5 5⁄16 × 10 7⁄8 in. (13.5 × 27.6 cm)
Source for F-111 and Orange Field, 1964Magazine clipping on paper3 13⁄16 × 5 ¾ in. (9.7 × 14.6 cm)
Photographs, taken by Hollis Frampton, for F-111, Spaghetti, Spaghetti (Grisaille), and The Friction Disappears,1964Color photograph and mixed media oncardboard; black-and-white photographand mixed media on cardboard8 ½ × 10 15⁄16 in.; 5 7⁄16 × 11 15⁄16 in.(21.6 × 27.8 cm; 13.8 × 30.3 cm)
Source for F-111, 1964Magazine clipping and mixed mediaon paper9 ¾ × 11 13⁄16 in. (24.8 × 30 cm)
Source and Preparatory Sketchfor F-111, 1964Magazine clipping and mixed mediaon paper12 × 11 ¾ in. (30.5 × 29.9 cm)
139–144: The Museum of Modern Art,New York, promised gift ofMarie-Josée and Henry R. Kravis
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(146: Photograph by Hans Namuth)145
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The hurdle in F-111 is another element that stems from a company thatwas a leader in its field. A 1948 advertisement from the Texas Company (Texaco) (fig. 108) promotes Sky Chief, a fuel that promises “A quick start—a flashing pace—an extra surge of power.” Texaco was the only company to sell motor engine fuel under the same name over many yearsand across all U.S. states. It was also a member of the Seven Sisters, a group of oil companies that ruled the global market from the 1950s to the 1970s. During World War II, Texaco was ninety-third on the list of U.S. trading partners for military goods.20 In the original installation, the hurdle is split down the middle, running at a right-angle towards thecorner of the room. The base on the left-hand side is made up of alumi-num panels, which reflect the opposite half to create the impression of a third element. The perspective is reinforced by the blue triangle which rises out of the corner, also reflected, and by the shadows that run parallel to it. “In the gallery it looked as if a runner would have to jump a triangular hurdle, or one with several alternatives, but they were blind alternatives because the hurdle was in a corner. The runner seemed to hurdle himself into a corner.”21
Confusion also arises when looking at the Air Force star: in F-111,Rosenquist alters the form, counter-form, and color of this multiple times (figs. 145–47). He unevenly splits the axisymmetric star down the middle, giving a diff erent color and outward shape to the left andright sides. In his collage, he notes: “American star becomes N.[orth]Korean star after a small change of color” (fig. 126). Rosenquist wasseventeen years old when the Korean War broke out. As a child, he would have experienced the events of World War II indirectly throughhis parents—the attack on Pearl Harbor forced his father to close anewly opened motel because of a lack of tourists. He also worked in amunitions factory, and in Dayton, Ohio, he serviced B-24 bombers that were flown in combat missions. Rosenquist experienced contemporaryevents as an adolescent male. Korea, which following World War II was occupied by Soviet soldiers in the north and by the United Statesin the south, split into the southern Republic of Korea and the northernDemocratic People’s Republic. On June 25, 1950, North Korean soldiers crossed the demarcation line along the thirty-eighth paralleland triggered the outbreak of war. Three years of conflict saw the AirForce drop around 450,000 tons of explosives and use napalm for thefirst time to set fire to vast areas. In total, 32,357 tons destroyed entire swathes of land and 2,500,000 civilians met their deaths during the conflict. From an American perspective, the war was not against NorthKorea, but against communism. The Cold War reached its first peak, driving the conflict—five years after the atomic bomb was dropped onJapan—to the edge of a preemptive atomic strike. Luckily, it didn’t come to that, but a massive arms race followed in its wake.22
With his choice of illustrations in F-111, Rosenquist tackles the subjectof the nuclear threat, which he reinforces with deliberately chosen advertisements. “Visual metaphors” further enhance the relevance ofthis topic. Some sections are covered fully or in part with floral patterns, each slightly different but clearly related, which he applied to his canvas and aluminum panels with the help of patterned paint rollers. “I saw the pattern in an elevator lobby [at Richard Brown Baker’s apartment] and thought of a solid atmosphere; you walk outside of your apartment into what used to be open air and all of the sudden feel that it hasbecome solid with radioactivity and other undesirable elements.”23
The Sherwin-Williams Company, a U.S.-based chemicals firm producingcolors, varnishes, and building materials, introduced the first quick-drying emulsion paint in 1941 with Kem-Tone and the Roller-Koater, a precursor of today’s paint roller. The company achieved considerable
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Rosenquist working on Horizon Home Sweet Home,1970, panel arrangement, Broome Street studio, New York, 1970
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Star Thief, 1980
James Rosenquist working on Star Thief, 1980f
Source for Star Thief, 1980fMagazine clippings, unidentified clippings,and mixed media on paper15 7⁄8 × 29 7⁄8 in. (40.3 × 75.9 cm)Estate of James Rosenquist
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Source for The Swimmer in the Econo-mist #1, 1997Color photocopy and mixed media on cardboard11 5⁄8 × 18 1⁄4 in. (29.5 × 46.4 cm)Estate of James Rosenquist
Source for The Swimmer in the Econo-mist #2, 1997Mixed media on paper14 × 47 5⁄8 in. (35.6 × 121 cm)Sammlung Deutsche Bank AG
Source for The Swimmer in the Econo-mist #1, 1997 Color photocopy and mixed media on cardboard11 7⁄8 × 17 7⁄8 in. (30.2 × 45.4 cm) Estate of James Rosenquist
Source for The Swimmer in the Econo-mist #3, 1997Mixed media on paper17 × 23 ¼ in. (43.2 × 59.1 cm)Sammlung Deutsche Bank AG
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Study for The Swimmer in the Econo-mist #1, 1997Lithographic ink and pencil on Mylar15 ¾ × 45 7⁄8 in. (40 × 116.5 cm)
Study for The Swimmer in the Econo-mist #1, 1996–97Lithographic ink and pencil on Mylar16 5⁄8 × 36 ¼ (42.2 × 92.1 cm)
Study for The Swimmer in the Econo-mist #1, 1997Mixed media on paper18 ½ × 37 ½ in. (47 × 95.3 cm)
Study for The Swimmer in the Econo-mist #2, 1997Lithographic ink and pencil on Mylar20 1⁄8 × 26 ¼ in. (51.1 × 133 cm)
Study for The Swimmer in the Econo-mist #3, 1997Lithographic ink and pencil on Mylar20 1⁄8 × 26 ¼ in. (51.1 × 66.7 cm)
Study for The Swimmer in the Econo-mist #3, 1997Mixed media on Mylar20 × 25 ¾ in. (50.8 × 65.4 cm)
Study for The Swimmer in the Econo-mist #1 and #3, 1996–97Lithographic ink and colored ink on Mylar16 × 27 ¾ in. (40.6 × 70.5 cm)
Study for The Swimmer in the Econo-mist #1 and #3, 1997Pencil on paper21 ¾ × 49 ¾ in. (55.2 × 126.4 cm)
Sammlung Deutsche Bank AG
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Source for The Swimmer in the Econo-mist #1, 1997Color photocopy and mixed media on cardboard11 5⁄8 × 18 1⁄4 in. (29.5 × 46.4 cm)Estate of James Rosenquist
Source for The Swimmer in the Econo-mist #2, 1997Mixed media on paper14 × 47 5⁄8 in. (35.6 × 121 cm)Sammlung Deutsche Bank AG
Source for The Swimmer in the Econo-mist #1, 1997 Color photocopy and mixed media on cardboard11 7⁄8 × 17 7⁄8 in. (30.2 × 45.4 cm) Estate of James Rosenquist
Source for The Swimmer in the Econo-mist #3, 1997Mixed media on paper17 × 23 ¼ in. (43.2 × 59.1 cm)Sammlung Deutsche Bank AG
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Study for The Swimmer in the Econo-mist #1, 1997Lithographic ink and pencil on Mylar15 ¾ × 45 7⁄8 in. (40 × 116.5 cm)
Study for The Swimmer in the Econo-mist #1, 1996–97Lithographic ink and pencil on Mylar16 5⁄8 × 36 ¼ (42.2 × 92.1 cm)
Study for The Swimmer in the Econo-mist #1, 1997Mixed media on paper18 ½ × 37 ½ in. (47 × 95.3 cm)
Study for The Swimmer in the Econo-mist #2, 1997Lithographic ink and pencil on Mylar20 1⁄8 × 26 ¼ in. (51.1 × 133 cm)
Study for The Swimmer in the Econo-mist #3, 1997Lithographic ink and pencil on Mylar20 1⁄8 × 26 ¼ in. (51.1 × 66.7 cm)
Study for The Swimmer in the Econo-mist #3, 1997Mixed media on Mylar20 × 25 ¾ in. (50.8 × 65.4 cm)
Study for The Swimmer in the Econo-mist #1 and #3, 1996–97Lithographic ink and colored ink on Mylar16 × 27 ¾ in. (40.6 × 70.5 cm)
Study for The Swimmer in the Econo-mist #1 and #3, 1997Pencil on paper21 ¾ × 49 ¾ in. (55.2 × 126.4 cm)
Sammlung Deutsche Bank AG
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Source for The Geometry of Fire, 2011Color photocopies and mixed media on cardboard13 3⁄8 × 29 ¼ in. (34 × 74.3 cm)Estate of James Rosenquist
Source for The Geometry of Fire, 2011Color photocopies and unidentified clippings on paper15 ¾ × 31 1⁄16 in. (40 × 78.9 cm)Estate of James Rosenquist
Opposite page: Detail of Source for The Geometry of Fire, 2011
The Geometry of Fire, 2011 283 284
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James Rosenquist, Chambers Street Studio,New York, 1980
29919 Rosenquist’s surprising statement that the clouds of smoke are a visual referenceto Israel’s Six-Day War can now be attested for the first time with the matchingillustration from Life magazine (“Israeli Thrust—The Astounding 60 Hours,” Life, June 16, 1967, 26–27), showing a direct correlation between the two; see this catalogue on p. 161. Rosenquist painted the image upside down.
20 Lucy Lippard, “James Rosenquist: Aspects of a Multiple Art,” Artforum, December 1965: 41–44, 41.
21 Life, October 30, 1944, 16.
22 Cf. Marcia Tucker, James Rosenquist, exh. cat. Whitney Museum of American Art,New York (New York, 1972), 20. A long version of the text can be found at: https://archive.org/stream/srosenquist00rose/srosenquist00rose_djvu.txt (accessed September 19, 2017). Rosenquist mentions that the points raised in Tucker’sinterpretation were not what he intended in making this picture, but he very much likes the potential his images contain for just such considerations, cf. Rosenquist andDalton, Painting Below Zero, 219–20.
23 Rosenquist has written the note “juxtaposed storm sky” on the collage.
24 Cf. in relation to this theme the discussions around the work by Sam Durant Sam, Scaffold, in the sculpture garden of the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis and theimage Open Casket (2016) that Dana Schutz showed in this year’s Whitney Biennial.tIn both cases there were violent protests in which the artists were accused of profiting from the suffering of African-Americans.
25 Rosenquist and Dalton, Painting Below Zero, 188.
26 Cf. for these events: Francis Frascina, Art, Politics and Dissent: Aspects of the Art Left in Sixties America (Manchester and New York: Manchester University Press, 1999), 108–10.
27 Cf. for the version from 2006, “Peace Tower: Irving Petlin, Mark di Suvero, andRirkrit Tiravanija,” Artforum, March 2006, 252–57, with an illustration of Rosenquist’swork on p. 256.
28 Joan Mondale, known due to her exceptional commitment to the arts as “Joan ofArt,” also wrote a remarkable book on art and politics: cf. the obituary by Anita Gates in The New York Times, February 3, 2014, A14.
29 There are several photos of Mondale in Rosenquist’s studio, one also in conversa-tion with Mark di Suvero from 1978, who had twelve years prior to this been politically engaged against the Vietnam War and whom Rosenquist at the time also supported with an image.
30 Rosenquist and Dalton, Painting Below Zero, 247ff.
31 Cf. Robin Pogrebin, “Arts Committee Resigns In Protest of Trump,” The New York Times, August 19, 2017, C3.
32 Rosenquist and Dalton, Painting Below Zero, 313.
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Strips of film from Empty Chairs (destroyed); Peter Schjedahl shooting
James Rosenquist filming Empty Chairs(photo courtesy of Gordon Hyatt)
Poster designed by Rosenquist for the Eighth New York Film Festival, Lincoln Center, New York, 1970
Sketch for Vantage Point, 1971
35mm film clips from four-screen film environment Vantage Point, 1971
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UNVERKÄUFLICHE LESEPROBE
Stephan Diederich, Yilmaz Dziewior
James RosenquistPainting as Immersion
Gebundenes Buch, Pappband, 336 Seiten, 25,3 x 29,0 cmISBN: 978-3-7913-5724-9
Prestel
Erscheinungstermin: Januar 2018
A monograph on the great Pop Art master, James Rosenquist, this book shows how the artist’slarge-scale works and their source materials remain powerful and relevant as cultural andpolitical commentary. With a background in advertising and painting billboards, James Rosenquist had a uniqueperspective on the dual effects of imagery and scale on the viewing experience. His colossalpieces are immersive—they surround the viewer and dominate most gallery spaces. In thisvolume readers can examine his process of creating image-laden abstractions through hissource materials. Rosenquist often started with images he’d literally ripped from the pages ofprint media and which he then transformed into collages. From there he would scale up thecollage, recreating it as a large-scale canvas or installation. This book presents both well-knownand rarely exhibited pieces, including F-111 and The Swimmer in the Economist, to showhow juxtaposing seemingly incongruent images creates a powerful mirror of commercialistculture. Essays about Rosenquist’s life, oeuvre, technique, and impact on the art world createa multi-faceted portrait of an artist who believed that the sum of the parts was essential tounderstanding the whole.